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tv   [untitled]    January 4, 2013 1:30pm-2:00pm EST

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less people are pursuing this line of what which means fairly polishes are now in high demand while ties now in the next ten years be able to spot and hire a skilled workers so as the job market gets more selective as the job market gets more selective. and the rather up then is the job of an actuary at around ninety thousand dollars per annum this job was found its way on to the top spot the top ten for four is a running now the job is actually to analyze financial risk which has been in abundance for the last four years so it probably comes as no surprise then that
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this talk of recession has never been so sort of stuck now for the top spot she might perhaps expect maybe a movie star or a formula one driver maybe well though quite not nearly as glamorous the number one job for twenty two of was a software engineer with an average twenty twelve salary of ninety thousand dollars and this occupation has held the top spot for two years running now known in the technology world as the creative minds behind the computer program these are the brains that put the next big thing in to action so if your job isn't on this list then there's always room for a new new you resolution. ok so let's move on switzerland's oldest bank will shut down after pleading guilty to helping americans a vade their taxes for almost ten years now the bank five gallon which has been
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operating for nearly three hundred years now has admitted to assisting more than one hundred u.s. citizens to hide one point two billion dollars from the u.s. revenue service now the new york court also ordered the bank to pay fifty seven point eight billion dollars in fines to us or forces for more i do believe i am joined by patrick young right here the co-author of the gathering storm so how lazy fat check now this is indeed an interesting one today and really what is the significance of it or what does it actually mean for the future of private banking in switzerland what's the bigger picture here. i mean. when the. people understanding that essentially what is the situation run by we no longer have i don't for to nicky for private binds to simply love him to
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america for all knowledge of american residents the opportunity to offer all forms of talks for the opportunities of investment sensually been coming for a long time i mean that was an incredibly remarkable loop in the 1980's and ninety's in particular where the swiss banks even set up huge massive offices in the middle of american cities and when they did so it looked to us as if they were really risking everything small when they go and they're a very very tiny bunch going to decide to actually it's just not worth the risk even being a bank because they've crossed swords with the i.r.s. they've obviously had one too many toothpaste tubes diamonds or whatever other traffic methods they were using and the swiss banks it's the news that everybody you know and it's becoming for many many years which is you have to play fair in a global environment and you can take money from people in the public but you can't just expect a lot of those people to evade tax yeah and i think as well read in the last five
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years aside there's been a lot of rules and regulations that have come into play and it's really come to a halt now at the moment and you think that this is just the tip of the ice i do think that there's more to come in terms of swiss banks and skeletons coming out. i think really most of the skeletons are all of the closet no i mean we have a good situation where literally there were two debates cubes of diamonds and all manner of all the james bond style ought to change going on in terms of smuggling assets and money and so on in and out of the united states of america they are pretty much nailed the forms are the difficulty is when it's actually the american rich investing all sure i don't think they're just going to end up paying more accountants more lawyers and so on in order to manage to reach the same sort of ways that they did before the swiss banking industry will i'm sure manage to find other ways in which it can expand its already have been doing so for many years but
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it's also really the difficulty that the united states of america elected here is this effectively united states of america investors and you can various u.s. regulations are knowledge being cut off from opportunities in the rest of the world and that means that the private bankers the more interesting clients to have all those people who are in the growing advancing rich world countries short child's russia india china and other emerging nations where in fact i actually like stark choice a lot more talks in the first place i pad so we've got time for today but thank you so much and dave spann the time. moving on then we are going to talk. to africa if we can that we are famous friends that has been granted russian citizen sit by president johnson have taken off to being i'm good by french president francois lawns attempt to write taxes on the mega rich to seventy five percent for the privilege of having a russian passport that you will also pay
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a much lower tax rate just thirty percent but that's to be lived in russia for at least a hundred a year he has to be here for so many days how lazy is the town to put a kind of a right how you're going to give me all the details on. in this case i imagine now we go to the movies to watch some hollywood block the boss through it come out and say yes was a nice movie and you know this hobby los russian actors it out yet it is there for example and so well and you should be talking about him in the russian song. and let me just get the let's just have a look at the details so he says millions in hollywood right and he then puts his money into a bank account in russia and really i suppose the benefit of the russian government goes into. his paying his income tax here in russia that's what all the russians do all russians we all pay equal income tax of thirteen percent yeah and even
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foreigners who lives and works in russia like you case or example you pay thirteen percent income after six months. moreover lawyers i've spoken to say that. if you are a tax resident of the country or pay income tax here even if you make your mind elsewhere because of that because russian income tax is one of the lowest in the world let's compare the highest thing come taxes currently in switzerland you can see the u.k. france and many european countries are taxing people around the halls of their factory even belgium where that has moved to texas fifty percent ok so france is outrageous. i mean a lot of news articles going out about this seventy five percent of. insisting upon the wealthy raising people a lot of my god and i at the same time a lot of people in the movie industry and in showbiz they do this kind of money would you why are you what you want to give away almost three quarters of your
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earnings and leave just like water to yourself what's your problem who isn't. russian. rather. let's listen how he welcomes just what you. musicians artists are people of a very delicate mentality. in russia say that artists can easily be offended therefore i understand the feelings of mr jeffard i read his declaration. that he feels european citizen of the world i do know even though we didn't see each other too many times that he loves from french history and culture and should be. on what you. like a friendship forming the thank you tell him that's all we've got time for we're going to have to move on because you got more coming up hey on alt hey we're going
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to talk to william binney a u.s. national security agency whistleblower about the ways the american government is spying on the side of. the government no longer represents the people the people are going to take stuff from. we. cannot. be a revolution in the traditional but in the middle east to come up. the way our economic system currently is not. going to get. caught.
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up. i. i. he survived war atrocities. to make a final decision. has changed his life and the world around him. by giving up. hope. and love to so many children. nikolai the american worker on.
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the eve. of.
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my guest today is william being a whistleblower former national security agency official he was one of the first to reveal the agency's massive domestic spying program mr binney revealed that n.s.a. sought and received access to telecommunications companies domestic and international billing records that it has intercepted somewhere between fifteen to twenty trillion communications mr binnie also claims that in order to cover its warrantless surveillance the agency concealed it under the patriotic sounding name terrorist surveillance program mr beaty thank you so much for coming in light of the patricius slash alan scandal while the public is so focused on the details of their family drama one may argue that the real scandal in this whole story is the
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power the reach of the surveillance state i mean if we take general allen thousands of his personal e-mails have been sifted through private correspondence i mean it's not like any of those man was planning an attack on america does it prove does this scandal prove the notion that there is no such thing as privacy in a surveillance state. well yes that's what i've been basically saying for quite some time is that the f.b.i. has access to the data collected which is basically the e-mails of virtually everybody in the country. and they have it at the f.b.i. has access to it all the congressional members are on on the surveillance to it's not no one's excluded they're all included so yes this can happen to to anyone if they become a target for whatever reason. if they are targeted by the government the government can go in with the f.b.i.
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or other agencies the government can go into their database pull all that they've collected over them on them over the years and reanalyze it also retroactively analyze everything they've done over the last ten years at least and it's not just about those who could be planning who could be a threat to national security but but also those who could be just it's everybody i thought at the end narrows device simply takes in the entire line so it takes all the data in fact they advertise to advertise that they can process the lines at session rates which means ten gigabit lines that's the nearest. not the s.t.s. sixty four hundred but the i forget the name but this is another device that they have that does that but it does it at ten gigabits to ten gigabits that's why they're building bluffdale because they have to have more storage because they can't figure out what's important so there are storing everything there so that
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e-mails going to be stored there for the future but right now it's stored in different places around the country but it is being collected and is that has an act and f.b.i. has you know has to be to it collected in bulk without even requesting yes the providers and then what about google you know releasing that this by annual transparency report and saying that the government demand for personal data is at an all time high and for for all of those requests in the u.s. google says they complied with the government demands ninety percent of the time but they're still saying that they're making the requests this not like it's all being funneled into into that storage what do you say to them well i would soon that that's the simple you know the source of the same data that they're already collecting. mark klein in his declarations in the court about the a t.n.t. facility in san francisco did documented the n.s.a. room inside that ace t.n.t.
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facility where they had naris devices to collect data off the fiber optic lines inside the united states so that's kind of a powerful device that would collect everything that was being sent that could collect on the order of one hundred over one hundred billion one thousand character e-mails a day one device so that's that gives you an idea of the magnitude of the kind of collection that's going on well you think they sift through those are really is the billions of e-mails i wonder how do they prioritize i mean is it like for national first what what's the how do they prioritize how do they i don't trip i don't think they're well first of all i don't think it's any filtering they're just going to store it all ok so then it's just a matter of selecting it when you want it so if they wanted to target you they would take your attributes and go into that database and pull out all your data that's what i was going to ask are they meaning my demeanor. i should say there is
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no afghanistan generally my e-mail. do you think now that i said that they will stop looking into my me helpless i don't think that would make any difference now if they had they had you on the target list you're on the list where you want cards and i'm sure i i i believe i've been on it for quite a few years. so i keep telling them everything i think of them in my e-mail so that they when they read it they'll understand what i think of them. do you think we should all like leave messages for the n.s.a. our mailbox sure mr binney you blew the whistle on the agency when george w. bush was president with president obama in office in your opinion has anything changed at the agency and just the failings program what in what direction is ricin in spending taking the program changes that's getting worse they're doing more that's why they i mean he is supporting the building of the bus still facility
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which is over two billion dollars they're spending on story joan of data so that means that they're collecting a lot more now and they need more storage for it so that that facility by my calculations that i submitted in a sworn affidavit to the court for the electronic frontier foundation lawsuit against an a say. would hold on the order of five thousand exabytes or five zeta bytes of data just at current storage capacity that's being advertised on the web that you can buy currently and that's not talking about what they have in the near future ok so what were they going to do with all of that is ok they're storing it why should anybody anybody be concerned well if you ever get on their enemies list like betray us did or for whatever reason then you can be drawn into that. surveillance do you think they were that general petraeus who was idolized by the same administration
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when general allen well there's there's certainly there's certainly some questions that have to be asked like why were they targeted to begin with. what law were they breaking or what probable cause did they have in the beginning even though general petraeus i was one would argue that ok they could have been there could have been a security breach arius something like that but with general allen i don't quite understand because that what they were looking into his private e-mails of to this to this woman and well this is that's the whole point that the whole point is what presidents are there is a gimmick and why do they i'm not sure what the internal because michael is you know well that's part of the problem this government doesn't want things in the public that it's not the government a transparent government to their whatever they're doing whatever reason they had the motive and whatever the motivation was and i'm not privy to it so i don't really know but i certainly think that there was something going on the background
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that made them target those fellows i mean otherwise why would they be doing it there is no crime there it seems that the public is divided between those who think that the government surveillance program violates their civil liberties and those who say i have nothing to hide so why should i care what do you say to those who think that should be concerned them the the problem is if they think they're not doing anything that's wrong they don't get to define that the central government does they do the central government defines what is right and wrong and whether or not they target you so it's not up to the individual to even if they think they're doing something wrong if their position on something is against what the administration has then then they could easily become a target tell me about the most outrageous thing that you came across during your work at the n.s.a. well. the violations of the constitution and any number of laws that existed at the
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time. that that was the that was the part that i could not be associated with that's why i left there they were building social networks on who who was communicating and with whom inside this country so that your entire social network of everybody of every us citizen was being compiled over time so they're taking it from one company alone roughly three hundred twenty million records a day that's how over time that that's probably accumulated up to close to twenty trillion over the years the original program that we put together to handle this to be able to identify terrorists anywhere in the world. and alert anyone that they were and under jeopardy would have would have been able to do that by encrypting everybody's communications except those who were targets so that in essence you would protect their identities and and the information about them until you could
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develop probable cause and then once you showed probable cause then you could do a decrypt and target them and we could do that and isolate those people all along that was no problem at all there was no difficulty in that but it sounds very difficult and very complicated easier to take everything and then you know that it's it's easier to use the graphing techniques if you will of the relationships for the world to filter out data so you don't have to handle all that data and it doesn't it doesn't burden you with a lot more information to look at then you really want to look then you really need to solve the problem so do you think that the agency doesn't have the filter now you know you have received a callaway award for their civic courage i congratulate you for that you and the web site in the press release it says it is awarded to those who stand up for
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constitutional rights and american values at great risk to their personal and professional lives. under the code of spy ethics i don't know if there is such a thing i assume well not your former colleagues i think they probably look upon you as a traitor how do you look back at them oh that's pretty easy they're violating the foundation of this entire country what our entire foundation of what how why this entire government was formed was founded with the constitution and the rights given to the people in the country under that constitution they're in violation of that and under executive order one three five two six section one point seven governing class occasion you cannot classify information that just to cover up a crime which this is and that was signed by president obama also president bush signed it earlier executive orders very similar one if any of this comes in to the
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supreme court and they rule it unconstitutional then the entire house of cards of the government falls what are the chances of that what are the odds well the government's doing the best they can to try to keep it out of court and of course we're trying to do the best we can to get into court. so we just thought it deserves a a a ruling from the supreme court ultimately the court is supposed to protect the constitution all these all these people in government take an oath to defend the constitution and they're not living up to their oath of office thank you thank you for a main service. thank .
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live. it. leaks. leak little. live.
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you know his secret laboratory to mukherjee was able to build the world's most sophisticated robots which will unfortunately doesn't give a darn about anything tim's mission to teach me the creation of life should care about humans and we're going this is why you should care only on the dot com. oh but. i.
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did speak. to. her. i wish i. was. a. good. enemy. but i'm a better little. the government no longer represents the. the people are going to take such. a traditional look at. the way our economic
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system currently.
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blind rush is going to be soon which brightened a few more about song from phones to impressions. for instance on t.v. dot com. from. morning news today violence was once again flared up.

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